Wonderland Essays

  • My Wonderland

    967 Words  | 2 Pages

    My Wonderland She may not wake up even once at night feeling uncomfortable if peas were kept under her mattress…yet she is no less than a princess. All the little boy needs is a horse and you’d be reminded of ‘the prince from a faraway land’ just as you know from the fairy tales read as a kid. Yes , this place reminds me of the magical kingdom like those of fairy tales. With many princes and princesses, god-mothers and fairies ….with the air imbibed in a happy tune of a beautiful symphony…a

  • Alice in Wonderland

    665 Words  | 2 Pages

    Alice in Wonderland Alice in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll, a story about a little girl and her adventures in a dream-like place called wonderland, has been a beloved children’s story for over one hundred years. Though viewed by many as a simple children’s tale, if it is taken into a little more depth one will find that is a brilliant satire on the English system of government. Indeed, Alice in Wonderland is a brilliant novel written by a brilliant author. The main character of this novel is

  • alice and wonderland

    1869 Words  | 4 Pages

    Finding the Child in Us All Lewis Carroll’s classic Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland has entertained not only children but adults for over one hundred years. The tale has become a treasure of philosophers, literary critics, psychoanalysts, and linguists. It also has attracted Carroll’s fellow mathematicians and logicians. There appears to be something in Alice for everyone, and there are almost as many explanations of the work as there are commentators. It may be perhaps Carroll’s fantastical style

  • Alice In Wonderland

    842 Words  | 2 Pages

    As we read Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland and The Island of Dr. Moreau, we enter into two unique worlds of imagination. Both Lewis Carroll and H.G. Wells describe lands of intrigue and mystery. We follow Alice and Prendick into two different worlds where animals speak, evolution is tested, and reality is bent until it nearly breaks. It is the masterminds of Lewis Carroll and H.G. Wells that take these worlds of fantasy and make them realistic. How do these two great authors make the unbelievable

  • Alice in Wonderland

    1245 Words  | 3 Pages

    Alice in Wonderland Alice in Wonderland by Charles L Dodgeson (Lewis Carrol) is a classic masterpiece and example of great literature. Many people know of this book as merely a child’s tale or a Disney movie. As both were adopted from the book, many of the ideas were not. I have my own feelings and opinions of this book. Remarkable use of words and an originally creative theme and plot structure are both used in this book. The author of this novel used many hidden meanings, symbolism, and ambiguous

  • Alice in Wonderland

    1214 Words  | 3 Pages

    In the 1951 Disney movie, Alice in Wonderland, Alice falls down a rabbit-hole while chasing a White Rabbit with a waistcoat and ends up in Wonderland. It is a place where animals talk and logic no longer exits. In the original work by Lewis Carroll, Alice grows internally and has control over her surroundings in Wonderland. She learns how to wear the crown of adulthood by finally knowing her identity in the end. Although Disney’s version imitates the same adventure as the original, Alice’s character’s

  • Alice in Wonderland

    900 Words  | 2 Pages

    Role of Rational Thinking in Alice’s Identity Crisis Lewis Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland follows the story of young Alice trapped in the world of Wonderland after falling down through a rabbit-hole. The rabbit-hole which is filled with bookshelves, maps, and other objects foreshadows the set of rules, the ones Alice is normally accustomed to, will be defied in Wonderland. This conflict between her world and Wonderland becomes evident shortly after her arrival as evinced by chaos in “Pool of Tears”

  • Alice In Wonderland - Nonsense?

    1659 Words  | 4 Pages

    Lewis Carroll’s works Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland & Through the Looking Glass and What Alice Found There are by many people considered nonsense books for children. Of course, they are, but they are also much more. Lewis Carroll had a great talent of intertwining nonsense and logic, and therefore creating sense within nonsense. If you look past the nonsense you can find a new meaning other than the one you found completing your third grade book report. You find that the books are full of references

  • Alice In Wonderland Essay

    1604 Words  | 4 Pages

    Alice in wonderland and The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe are two novels that have the perfect combination of magic, imagination and fantasy which gives us the power to use a child’s like sense of wonder. Each book also differs in terms of morals which will be argued through the use of the events, quotes, and characters. Moral principles such as honesty and integrity, courage, forgiveness, and self-sacrifice will be discussed in The Lion, The Witch, and The wardrobe. As for Alice in wonderland, the

  • Comparing The Two Movies Of Alice And Wonderland, And Alice In Wonderland

    1726 Words  | 4 Pages

    of the genres are Alice in Wonderland, made in 1951, and Alice in Wonderland, made in 2010. I chose the two movies of Alice in Wonderland because not only do they both bring to life the story of Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, but they each also have contributed to my childhood. Growing up, I remember watching the original movie with classmates and wanting it to be a real-life movie. In 2010, my wish was answered and a live action Alice in Wonderland was updated and released. The

  • Alice in Wonderland by Lewis Caroll

    1168 Words  | 3 Pages

    Alice in Wonderland by Lewis Caroll Based on the novel Alice in Wonderland by Lewis Caroll, Alice, the heroine of the story is a curious, imaginative, strong- willed, and honest young English girl. Her adventures begin when she falls asleep by the side of a stream in a meadow and dreams that she follows a White Rabbit down his hole. Her curiosity has made her ventured the world she never been before, entered each doors that she able to open, she even trying hardly to figured out how to open the

  • Alice In Wonderland: The Story Of Alice In Wonderland

    1324 Words  | 3 Pages

    The story of the curious little girl named Alice was a late arrival to the fairy tale scene; yet many still consider this strange tale a classic. The beloved classic story of Alice in Wonderland has a place in many childhoods, and some adults’ lives. As many other fairy tales, Alice in Wonderland has been re-imagined time and time again. Disney has made sure this will be a story to be remembered for years to come. Nevertheless, I will be discussing two of the more obscure re-imaginings of this story;

  • Analysis Of Alice In Wonderland

    902 Words  | 2 Pages

    How did Tim Burton convey growing up in Alice In Wonderland? Alice In Wonderland is a fantasy based movie conveying the transition from childhood to adulthood that was made in 2010 by director Tim Burton. This movie is about a 19-year-old girl called Alice that falls down a rabbit hole while in a stressful situation about her future life and finds herself in Underland (Wonderland). While Alice is in Underland she is set on a path to slay the Jabberwocky (a dragon like creature) that is controlled

  • Alice in Wonderland

    1006 Words  | 3 Pages

    Alice in Wonderland In Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, Lewis Carroll tells an entertaining story about a young girl’s adventures in a strange “Wonderland.” This novel represents a typical girl’s struggle to break away from adult control and receive a desired freedom from their absurd society. Although the novel was written during the Victorian age and many of the events of the story are based on Victorian society, children today also feel the suffocation of adult control and a society without

  • Lewis Carroll's Alice In Wonderland

    1076 Words  | 3 Pages

    Lewis Carroll's Alice In Wonderland “So she sat on, with closed eyes, and half believed herself in Wonderland, though she knew she had but to open them again, and all would change to dull reality . . .” (Carroll 119). Wonderland: a place where everything is different and the imagination is free to roam wild. A place where it does not matter how big a person is, but the intellect that is in a person. Existing in the dreams of children everywhere, wonderland is a place of escape, causing a person

  • Wonderland Satire

    917 Words  | 2 Pages

    Social and Political Satire in Alice in Wonderland In such a cherished children’s book, Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, written in 1865, has caused great commotion in political and social satire. It slowly but surely grew into one of the most adored publications in the Victorian era, expanding into today’s modern age. Lewis Carroll was the pen name utilized by Charles L. Dodgson and has forth created a sequel named Through the Looking Glass, And What Alice Found There composed first in 1871. In

  • Importance of Mathematics in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland

    1800 Words  | 4 Pages

    Importance of Mathematics in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland In his essay "Alice's Journey to the End of Night," Donald Rackin describes Wonderland as "the chaotic land beneath the man-made groundwork of Western thought and convention" where virtually all sense of pattern is absent and chaos is consistent.  Rackin claims that "there are the usual modes of thought-ordinary mathematics and logic: in Wonderland they possess absolutely no meaning."  Rackin argues that our traditional view

  • Probing Insanity in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland

    2318 Words  | 5 Pages

    Probing Insanity in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland Everybody dreams during his lifetime. It is a part of human nature that we experience almost everyday. Dreams can be lost memories, past events and even fantasies that we relive during our unconscious hours of the day. As we sleep at night, a new world shifts into focus that seems to erase the physical and moral reality of our own. It is an individual's free mind that is privately exposed, allowing a person to roam freely in his own universe

  • Alice In Wonderland Analysis

    755 Words  | 2 Pages

    Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland Alice in Wonderland is a classic novel written by Lewis Carroll. The story is about how a young girl’s curiosity leads her to discover a whole different world in which she grows and matures. In the novel, Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, readers can see the monomyth cycle expressed through various stages including: the beginning of her journey, meeting the mentors, and meeting enemies and allies. Alice’s journey and call to adventure begins with a talking animal

  • Themes In Alice In Wonderland

    1162 Words  | 3 Pages

    Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland by author Lewis Carroll depicts the story of a young girl named Alice and her adventurous encounter with a marvelous place called Wonderland. In the start of this novel Alice is sitting by the riverbank and is drowsily reading next to her sister when she notices a White Rabbit running by her and he pulls out a watch complaining about being late then he goes down a rabbit . A curious Alice proceeds to then follow the white rabbit down the hole where she ends up seeing